Culture

Why U.S. Audiences Are Crazy for K-Pop


[bright chiming music]

Cheesy. Androgynous.

Curious. Bold.

Different. Spectacle.

Crazy. Fascinating.

In your face.

[crowd cheering]

[up-tempo pleasant piano music]

My name is Jenna Gibson.

I’m a doctoral student at the University of Chicago.

I’m Simon Critchley.

I teach philosophy at the New School for Social Research.

I am Dr. Crystal Anderson.

I am an affiliate faculty member

in Korean studies at George Mason University.

I’m Stephanie Choi.

I’m a PhD candidate

at University of California Santa Barbara.

My name is Jeff Rabhan.

I’m the chair

of the Clive Davis Institute of Recorded Music

at Tisch School of the Arts.

My name is Tim Chan, and I’m the lifestyle editor

at Rolling Stone.

K-pop is just more than music.

It’s the styling.

[Fantasia]

♪ Let me be your fantasy ♪

It’s the choreography.

[rapping in foreign language]

It’s the makeup, and it’s the music.

♪ Shining through the city with a little funk and soul ♪

♪ So I’m gonna light it up like dynamite, whoa oh oh ♪

K-pop as a whole, I don’t think has broken

through that barrier yet,

not to the point where they’re a household name yet.

[bright soft music]

Well, look, I think that what we have

to talk about is the idea of is K-pop a thing?

It’s absolutely a thing.

Is K-pop a thing? Nowhere close.

I completely disagree.

I think that K-pop and BTS in particular

have broken into a mainstream audience in the last year

in a way that is unprecedented.

You’ve seen BTS on Jimmy Fallon.

They took over Grand Central Station.

They were on Carpool Karaoke.

They were on Ellen, Today Show.

There’s all kinds of mainstream audiences

that are being exposed to these K-pop groups

in a way that is unprecedented.

They’re on Ellen? I didn’t know.

Wait a minute! I got this all wrong.

We gotta start. I’m kidding.

[people laughing behind the camera]

The US market is fickle by ignorance.

People like what they like.

There’s a reason why every country song

since the beginning of time is about my dog,

my momma, my truck, and church, ’cause it works.

If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it. That’s the American motto.

That’s why there are tried and true,

hackneyed, repetitive themes in music.

Pop music by design is the low-hanging fruit.

I don’t know if I would describe it that way.

We do know that the United States

has a certain pattern that it has followed in terms

of the types of music it embraces in the mainstream.

The closer you are to music that is familiar

or music that other people have deemed to be popular,

the easier it is for you to enter into the mainstream

in the United States.

But one of the challenges that K-pop has

is that we have several barriers, one of which is language

that makes that a little bit challenging.

Yeah, I would agree with that.

I think a lot of people in the US

would describe K-pop as a fad,

as something that’s not gonna last.

Part of it is because they

don’t really understand the language,

and so they don’t really know

what these artists are singing about.

[singing in foreign language]

So when it’s something that’s hard to follow,

you don’t really give it a chance

’cause you don’t really understand it.

Yes, it’s true.

A lot of global fans don’t bother

to look up the lyrics, and when they do, oftentimes,

those lyrics are mistranslated.

But they like the music anyway.

It definitely helps when they do sing in English,

but that’s not something that we really care about.

We just want them to be comfortable

with whatever language they wanna speak in,

how they wanna do it.

We’re fine with whatever they wanna put out.

I think one of the things that people misunderstand

about K-pop is that it’s like this bubble pop a genre

of music, and it can be that.

But it can also be a lot of other things as well.

Yeah, I think that’s another assumption coming out

from the outside of Korea,

that the western media, very often describes K-pop

as a stereotypical idea, that the Asian culture.

Right.

I think Americans don’t necessarily take the time

to learn the difference between Chinese Americans,

Korean Americans, Japanese.

Asian is Asian, white is white,

and when people are grouped together

in a large-scale way, everything feels foreign to them,

and there’s a real conundrum there.

Yes.

I think the other part of it has to do

with the development of racial discourse

and racial histories in the United States.

Think about how many Asian American actors are popular,

how many Asian American musical acts we have.

It’s not that they don’t exist,

but they haven’t entered into the mainstream

of the United States, either.

So to ask K-pop to do the thing

that even Asian American celebrities

and artists and musicians haven’t been able to do speaks

to something else that’s happening in American culture.

[bright soft music]

Back in the early 90s is when people say

that K-pop really started.

It started with a group called Seo Taiji & the Boys.

[singing in foreign language]

And that’s where historians who talk about this say

that K-pop really took off.

Well, interestingly, prior to K-pop,

J-pop had a marginal splash internationally,

and there have been a few attempts here and there

for Korean artists to break into the US market.

I would have to say I thought Rain

did a spectacular job, but I think recently,

we’ve seen much more of a full-scale attempt

to break into the American music market

and make an impactful international statement.

Yeah, I think it seems really amazing to us now

because we see South Korea as this very developed,

very advanced country, which it is.

But you go back just 40, 50 years,

and Korea was extremely impoverished.

It came out of the Korean War devastated,

and thanks to a lot of economic policies,

South Korea developed extremely rapidly,

and one of the main strategies they used

was to become an export-oriented economy.

In terms of an export-oriented culture,

there are extreme limitations as

to what they can actually export

because the country’s half the size of Florida.

It will have to be either manufactured goods in Korea,

of which there are few, or it’s going to have to be culture.

Yeah, and if you look at the consumer in South Korea,

the population is not large enough

to sustain the number of K-pop groups that are out there.

So the K-pop industry has become export oriented as well.

I don’t think K-pop acts are created

with this idea of exporting culture in mind.

They’re always really, really dedicated to their country.

They love their Korean fans.

So first and foremost, they’re a Korean artist.

I completely disagree.

I think that there is a huge range

in terms of what these groups could look like.

There are Chinese members, Thai members,

Japanese members that are in these K-pop groups,

and they can speak to those audiences

in Japan, China, the United States.

And you have K-pop songs that include lyrics in Spanish.

For example, there’s a group called Super Junior

who are very popular in Latin America,

and they recently did a collaboration

with a Mexican band called Reik.

[singing in foreign language]

And that’s very much with an eye

towards finding more consumers that are going

to support the long-term career of these groups.

We might wanna mention the importing of the culture.

So because of the American military presence in South Korea,

they brought American culture with them.

This was during the Korean War and in the years afterwards.

That’s how the culture got in.

So then it’s mixed and exported out

to the globe in terms of K-pop.

Once again, it’s a hybrid musical form.

So it’s taking things from this culture

and that culture and that style of music

and this style of music, and I think

that there’s something that’s unique to K-pop.

It doesn’t sound like other popular musics in East Asia.

There’s a wide variety of different types

of music in K-pop.

There are more happy, girly songs,

but there’s also more deep songs, and there’s rap.

And I feel like if people were more open minded to that

and then open minded to listening to something,

even if you don’t understand it,

it would definitely become a lot more popular,

and I think a lot more people

would realize they actually like it a lot more

than they think they would.

[bright soft music]

K-pop is definitely structured differently.

There’s a lot of highs and lows, louds and softs.

It doesn’t follow a traditional verse,

chorus, verse, chorus, bridge, chorus formula.

A lot of times, we use in and out

between a rap verse and a melodic verse.

[Fantasia] [singing in foreign language]

A lot of times, the beat will drop differently.

[Kick It] [singing in foreign language]

And that’s why I think you can’t chalk it up

to being like generic cookie-cutter pop.

What that means is, musically,

it doesn’t sound like other records

that are on the air today.

It’s not made by producers that are on the air today,

and many of the K-pop records are intentionally made muddy.

So you don’t hear the separation of tracks.

You don’t hear the soaring melody lines.

They don’t stack vocals in the same way.

It just sounds like a vocal.

You’re not getting those opportunities

to actually see what an individual can do.

You’re meant to experience them as a group.

I think that’s correct,

especially when you’re dealing with the groups.

It’s about putting those voices together

in particular kinds of ways,

which is why when individuals from those groups

release their own music, it’s a treat

because then you can see the kind of range

or the kind of different ways they use their voice,

which is not always apparent in the singles

that are with the entire group.

In K-pop, there’s also always roles in a group,

like you need your rap line, your vocal line.

There’s the dance line.

They usually have certain amount

of group members who are advances in dance,

so it’s like a divide and conquer type thing.

We’ve always had a boy band scene here in the states.

We’ve always had pop groups, girl groups

ever since, I would say, the 60s and 70s.

And I guess it’s hard to say if people

are asking for these individual personalities

or if that’s the way they were marketed to us.

So because a western audience is familiar

with boy bands like The Backstreet Boys, One Direction,

they have a very specific picture in their mind, right?

There’s always a cute one.

The pretty one. The boy next store.

The heartthrob. The one that Mom loves.

[Jenna] The sexy one.

[Tim] The one who’s good at dancing.

[Jeff] The bad boy with the tattoos.

And I think I don’t really see that

in K-pop nearly as much.

The members of the groups definitely

have their own personalities,

but I think it’s a lot more of a mix,

and there isn’t necessarily a push

to have them fit into those specific types of molds.

Right.

A K-pop boy band is really meant

to just be seen as a band, not a boy band

where there are not eight unique personalities or,

in some cases, 18 unique personalities.

It is meant to be seen as one.

I don’t think so.

They do definitely have characters.

It’s just that they just construct

over the course of their career.

I think BTS’ Jimin was one example.

The company wanted him to project this chic image,

so he tried not to talk at the beginning

of his [indistinct] years,

and fans were like, I don’t really feel close to him.

And then he started to talk, and he was really hilarious.

He had a really friend personality,

and fans were like, Now he’s showing his real personality,

and they loved him more.

[bright soft music]

Part of what makes K-pop so exciting,

especially the boy bands in K-pop,

is that they’re really blurring the lines

between what’s considered masculine and feminine.

For example, a lot of these K-pop groups

are ambassadors for makeup brands,

and the fact that they’re not ashamed about it

or embarrassed about it really speaks

to this larger idea of K-pop encouraging people

to be who they wanna be, to be free to express themselves

however they wanna dress, however they wanna look.

They’re not worried about these rigid standards

of masculinity, and they do wanna look good on stage,

and they don’t necessarily need to be worried

about wearing makeup just because of some rule

about what men should and shouldn’t be wearing.

But that being said, you do have people coming out

and saying really awful things,

homophobic things, racist things.

And the more exposure to a broader audience

and the more success, you’re gonna get some

of those comments as well.

Right.

It’s the problem of the American media

that keep pushing this stereotypical image

on these K-pop idols as typical Asian men stereotype

that they already had.

[upbeat blues rock music]

If you look at the way black musicians,

especially black male musicians,

entering the entertainment industry

before the civil rights movement,

they tried to portray non-threatening,

entertaining, happy look.

I think the same thing is going on

with Asian masculinity nowadays

that we can think about why was it Psy

who became popular in the US, and why Gangnam Style?

One of the reasons why Psy was embraced in the way

that he was is that he did not present a threat.

[Gangnam Style]

♪ Gangnam style ♪

[singing in foreign language]

♪ Gangnam style ♪

He was round, the video was funny,

and so there was no challenge

to the way that American culture perceives Asian men.

What I found out was that the western media

very often describes idols as androgynous.

So it’s not simply about

whether they look androgynous or seem.

That would be a cultural difference

of how you view these idols.

I think the main aspect of this

is that are they gonna be popular

to women in our society? [laughs]

You cannot be a modern handsome man

because that’s threatening.

So you have to think about culturally

how K-pop is engineered.

K-pop is a creation, okay?

The boys, men, males, females,

people who are chosen are chosen for very specific reasons.

They are trained. They are characters.

They are taught to behave a certain way,

which embraces the theme of that particular group.

I think we have to be really careful

about how we talk about these stars.

There’s a tendency in the western media

to say things like, They’re coming off an assembly line,

the K-pop factory.

And I have a really big problem with terms like that

because I think those terms are very dehumanizing,

and so I think that that’s one thing

that I would like to see change a little bit

in the discourse of how we talk about K-pop.

What I would say to that

is they do have unique personalities within Korean culture

where they fill a certain void or a need

that executives have identified

or believe they have identified.

So every part of that experience

is meant to fulfill a certain need.

They are meant to be looked at not like you and me.

They are meant to be elevated.

I agree.

It’s completely constructed, and the superficiality

of K-pop is joyful, I think.

[soft bright music]

We don’t care, and K-pop is about that not caring.

These are characters. We don’t really know them.

They don’t really know us,

but there’s a kind of free enjoyment that that allows.

I would agree with the latter part of that.

I think that one of the great things about K-pop

is its joy, and I think that as academics,

we don’t spend a lot of time talking about joy.

[laughs] I approach it in strictly Heideggerian terms.

Heidegger wanted authenticity.

Heidegger wanted us to rise up

above our inauthentic involvement in lives.

But I think that’s why he ended up as a Nazi.

I think the politics of authenticity

are what lie behind Heidegger’s national socialism,

and I think average inauthentic existence is where it’s at,

and pop music is the kind of symphony of that existence.

Heidegger’s account of inauthentic social life

is governed by these three mechanisms:

chatter, idle talk,

[muffled chatter]

curiosity, lust, and ambiguity.

I see each of those three things as operative in K-pop.

It’s not clear what anything means.

Everything seems to mean something else.

We look at things with a kind of lustful curiosity,

maybe bordering on obsession and love

in the case of a lot of fans,

and then chatter that this is words being used

in this free and bizarre way and in multiple languages.

What I take from Heidegger is to celebrate inauthenticity,

to celebrate the messiness and curiosity,

ambiguity, and chatteriness of popular culture.

So K-pop is a kind of wonderful celebration

of our inauthenticity.

Authenticity is just an argument. It’s not a fact.

Authenticity very often plays a role

for a certain genre or a certain musician

to claim authority, for instance,

rock authenticity or hip hop’s keeping it real.

Yeah. What do you mean by real?

Authenticity always seems to return to an idea of purity,

the expression of some pure essence

or the expression of some purity in relation to place.

But the genius of pop music has always been about impurity.

It’s blending, it’s mixing, it’s borrowing,

and K-pop is where that adventure is at the moment.

I do agree with that.

I think that what you see in K-pop right now

is this blending and mixing and that there

is a kind of authenticity in that.

[crowd cheering faintly] [bright soft music]

[fans yelling and cheering]

So intimate labor is the type of labor

where you present intimacy your consumer.

So in terms of K-pop idols, they present

what we call fan service, which is verbal

and nonverbal, musical and non-musical behaviors

that would please their fans.

Yeah, the idea that, as a star,

you have to generate that intimacy,

that kind of curiosity bordering on lust, on love.

One thing that K-pop has done really well harks back

to the 90s and 2000s when bands

would do mall tours and meet and greets, backstage passes.

K-pop artists do a lot of those

and an old-school way of doing business,

but I think it’s been really effective

because these fans feel more of a personal,

deeper connection with the artist.

It is.

So intimate labor is not unique to K-pop,

but it’s actually very prevalent

in the entertainment industry in general.

If you see Justin Bieber outside of the stage,

he would let his fans kiss on his cheek,

although he doesn’t know who they are.

But he understands that these are his fans,

so the identities are not on a personal level,

but you understand them as your idol,

and the idols understand these group

of people as one personality that would be the fan.

Right.

It’s crucial that you have those kinds of events

to maintain your connections.

But I do think it is a component of K-pop for sure

that helps them maintain that rabid fan base.

Yeah.

I think the prevalence of things

like behind the scenes vlogs

and going Instagram Live before going to bed

is one thing that’s really cool in a way

because the fans are able to connect with them

in a little bit more of an intimate setting

rather than on the stage.

Sure.

So K-pop idols use a multitude of tools to talk

with their fans and also have fans access their content.

They do that through V Live, which is another avenue

where idols can talk in real time with their fans.

And so it’s that kind of interaction

that I think is unique in the level of interaction

that happens between K-pop idols and their fans.

[bright soft music]

The more you pay, the more you feel

like you have ownership over idols’ bodies,

idols’ privacy, mainly because you feel

like you’re buying that intimate relationship.

You see this particularly in Korean fandom.

If members start dating or it comes out that they’re dating,

there’s this big scandal because they

should be only focused on the fans.

There was recently a particularly big scandal

because someone came out and said

that he’s getting married and that he’s getting married

because his fiance is expecting.

And so this wall just went straight up

between the Korean fans who largely wanted

to kick him out of the group and the international fans

who really are supporting him.

Yeah.

There was a member of BTS that was photographed

at a bar having a beer in Paris,

and this photo circulated, and it got a lot of attention.

Some people were like, We should leave him alone.

He’s on vacation.

Other people were like, Oh my God,

how can he be drinking alcohol?

Now keep in mind, he’s fully legal age, he’s on vacation,

his management company knows where he’s at, but again,

there’s almost this expectation for these K-pop idols

to be pure and to be completely blemish free,

and you wanna preserve them

as this really idyllic, angelic figure.

There is this sense that, because there’s no line

when it comes to the content that they’re putting out,

sometimes people worry that it’s encouraging this lack

of a line with their actual private life,

not their broadcasted private life.

So one trend that we’re seeing a little bit more of

that I think is really promising is, for example, BTS.

Last fall, they decided to take a break, a vacation,

and that was a big deal in the K-pop industry.

And fans really took that as a role model

for the rest of the industry.

Hopefully, that’ll trickle down throughout the industry,

and more stars can take a total break

and step away from that need to constantly be on

and constantly be showing their private lives for the fans.

[girl speaking in foreign language]

[bright soft music]

In the US market,

there’s about two million Korean Americans

or people of Korean descent.

Without question, BTS or large K-pop groups

are going to be able to sell tickets in New York City

and certainly sell out in Madison Square Garden

and can do well probably

in the top 10 Korean American markets in the US.

But beyond that, they can’t.

[laughs]

I would actually challenge the notion

that BTS’s success depends on Asian Americans.

I know for a fact that one of the things we know

about K-pop fandom is that it’s incredibly diverse.

In fact, in my data, I constantly see very,

very few Asian American respondents

and more Latino, African American,

and white respondents in the United States.

So that’s actually a myth.

Yeah, so BTS has been number one

on the Social 50 chart for Billboard

for more than two years, and they just broke the record

that was previously held by Justin Bieber.

And then you can also, of course, look at sales.

That’s the easiest way to look at it.

So BTS, for example, has sold thus far more

than three million copies of their latest album.

I think they actually hit three million preorders

before it even came out.

So if that’s not success, I don’t know what is.

Sure.

But there’s a big gap between being a phenomenon,

which is actually impacting all the music around you

versus having a little bit of success.

So ultimately, they’re doing fine, but they certainly

are by no means a staple of American culture.

I think what that means is that the people

that love them love them,

and nobody else is paying any attention.

So I think the American music audience

is getting less xenophobic over time.

We’re seeing that barrier broken down,

and we’re seeing some really amazing artists breaking in

in a way that we haven’t seen before.

Look, with each passing day,

there’s gonna be new audience members.

There’s going to be people who discover it.

There’s going to be people who enjoy the art form

in many different ways.

And look, by design, it’s meant to be expansive,

and I think that opportunity exists.

I think that success in the US

does represent a particular kind of prestige.

However, if you look at what the Korean music agencies

are doing as a whole, their primary markets

are still China and Japan.

It’s very interesting coming from an American point of view

because we’re used to being the center.

We’re used to everybody aspiring to be like us.

From an economic point of view,

K-pop does not need the United States.

[crowd cheering]



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